
The
Goths were a Germanic tribe on the Danube River frontier known to
the Romans from the 1st century AD. Pressured and then displaced when
the Huns moved west out of Central Asia, the Goths moved west into
Europe and over the Danube River to escape the oncoming hordes. After
taking part in the fall of Rome, they vied with other barbarians for
the leavings of the Western Roman Empire during the Early Middle Ages.
The Goths originated on the island of Gotland in the Baltic, to
the best of our knowledge, and split into two groups as they migrated
south across Central Europe. The Visigoths, or West Goths, settled
in modern Romania during the 2nd century. The Ostrogoths, or East
Goths, settled farther to the east on the northwest coast of the
Black Sea. In 376 AD the Visigoths were driven from modern Romania
by the Huns and moved south across the Danube. Their strength was
estimated at 60,000 men, women, and children. They defeated a Roman
army from Constantinople, settled briefly south of the Danube, and
then pushed into Italy. In 409 they sacked Rome under their king
Alaric and then moved north into Gaul. The Romans gave them southwestern
Gaul. From their they eventually extended their rule into all of
modern Spain.
The Ostrogoths broke away from Hunnish rule and followed their
cousins into Italy late in the 5th century. They were encouraged
to invade by the Eastern Emperor who wanted deposed the barbarian
then ruling as viceroy. Under Theodric, king of modern Switzerland
and the Balkans already, the Goths entered Italy in 488, completing
its conquest in 493.
Theodric's kingdom did not last long following his death in 526.
Using a struggle for succession as an excuse, the Byzantines sent
an army to Italy in 536 led by their great general Belisarius. The
Byzantines hoped to regain Italy and restore the old Roman Empire
in the West.
The war dragged on, devastating the countryside in conjunction
with plague and famine. In 552 the Ostrogoths were finally defeated
in Italy. They ceased to exist as a separate group by the late 6th
century when northern Italy was invaded by a new group of barbarians
called the Lombards.
The Visigoth kingdom in Spain lasted somewhat longer. In the late 5th century
Clovis of the Franks pushed the Visigoths out of France and over the Pyrenees
Mountains. Following the death of Clovis his kingdom fragmented and the Visigoths
were left alone temporarily. In 711 a new threat appeared from the south. Islamic
armies crossed over from North Africa and destroyed the last Gothic kingdom
in four years.
The Goths are remembered for being the first to sack Rome and thereby beginning
the final collapse of the ancient world order in Europe. Their admiration for
Rome and attempts to preserve it, however, allowed much of the Roman culture
to survive. For example, the modern languages of Italy, France, Spain, Portugal,
and Romania are derived from Latin influenced by later settlers. They are not
variations of German, as was the case in England.